Canada dominated the podium at the Freestyle Skiing World Cup in Calgary ©FIS

Chloé Dufour-Lapointe avenged her defeat to sister Justine last weekend as she claimed victory in the moguls event at the International Ski Federation (FIS) Freestyle Skiing World Cup on home snow in Calgary.

Following the Dufour-Lapointe sisters' unprecedented podium sweep in the previous competition, the formidable Canadian sisters were nearly able to replicate the feat as Chloe topped the podium with a score of 77.42.

World and Olympic champion Justine took silver as she recorded a total of 77.24, just 0.18 adrift of the winning score, while Canada continued their monopoly of the event as Andi Naude sealed bronze.

The result saw Chloé maintain her position at the top of the overall leaderboard on 240 points, 36 ahead of Justine.

Mikaela Matthews of the United States is currently third on 145 points.

"I wasn't thinking about beating Justine today," Chloé Dufour-Lapointe said.

"I was just thinking about what I wanted to correct, what I wanted to do in the final run.

"We started really early this morning, so I was scared it was going to be icy.

"But I managed today to do my runs and be technical and smart with my technique and hold on to the yellow bib, I really enjoyed it."

Olympic silver medallist Mikaël Kingsbury picked up his third straight moguls win with victory on home snow in Calgary
Olympic silver medallist Mikaël Kingsbury picked up his third straight moguls win with victory on home snow in Calgary ©Getty Images

Olympic silver medallist Mikaël Kingsbury maintained the Canadian dominance of the moguls discipline as he secured his third straight win in the men’s event, finishing with a total of 81.63.

Team-mate Phillippe Marquis clinched silver as he amassed 80.51 points, with Japan’s Sho Endo doing enough to earn bronze on 75.34.

The third-place finish for the Japanese marked his return to the podium for the first time since he suffered a crash at the Freestyle Skiing World Cup event in Deer Valley last year, which ruled him out of the remainder of the 2014/15 season.

Kingsbury, the reigning dual moguls world champion, strengthened his grip on the overall title as he now has 300 points, 120 ahead of nearest challenger and compatriot Marquis.

"It's one of the toughest courses in the world, for sure, with tough conditions today, super icy," he said.

"But I managed my competition well.

"This is my sixth year in a row that I win here, which is totally crazy."

The next stop on the Freestyle Skiing World Cup calendar will be at Deer Valley, the United States from February 4 to 6.